“Penelope”

Posted on Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

So in keeping with posting what’s on my easel in real time. The 2nd section of plaster on “Penelope” is now finished and will be curing on my easel while I prepare panels for new works.
penelope for website
At 30″x30″ she will now continue “waiting” to be transferred onto cloth as she is too heavy to stay on plaster and cement board. This will happen throughout the next few weeks. The window by which she sits was referenced from a fascinating place called Bruzzano,Calabria.

Below you can see that everything and everyone from the village is long gone. You can also see my mother’s village of Ferruzzano on the hilltop in the background.
ferruzzano da Bruzzano
Interestingly, there is visible evidence of inhabitation of from byzantine, pre-hellenic and even neolithic civilizations here ..look closely at the rock and how it is carved in places
Untitled-3.bruzzano detailtif
Does that look like a buffalo? and a cave dwelling?? Well I guess we are talking thousands of years BC… Calabria has such a rich history!

cave copy
If you like what you see here, be sure to view my You Tube video called “My Italy” for more beautiful imagery from Calabria as well as more frescoes. The complete and final version is now done! See you there!

2 Comments

  1. allessia Imbrogno says:September 3, 2009 at 7:21 pm

    I meant to comment on this one.
    YAY it’s done.

    Good work, i love it!

    <3

  2. Liana Sofia Tumino says:September 5, 2009 at 6:16 pm

    Thanks Al!!

Liana Sofia Tumino

Celebrating 19 years of continued exploration and specialization in fresco painting, an ancient art that requires painting into wet plaster with pure pigment.

Liana Sofia creates small to medium frescoes on panels of wood, tile, stone or cement board, while larger works are detachments from wall to cloth, the result of a restoration process called “The Strappo Technique.” or Fresco detachments.

Rich with the memory of the moment of capture, each fresco begins with a photograph taken within the villages of Liana Sofia's parents and grandparents. She aims to re-live the experience and beauty of each place as she paints it, to evoke a sense of presence to the viewer.

Fine art collectors across the country have become intrigued by Liana Sofia's work when they understand the historical significance of the medium as well as it’s challenges,complexity and unique beauty.

Italian Film I LOVE!

*Golden Door (Nuovomondo)
The Leopard (Gattopardo)
Mafioso
Cinema Paradiso
Kaos
Respiro
Life is Beautiful
*The Tiger and the Snow (La Tigre e la Neve)
Il Postino
The Flowers of St Francis
The Bicycle Thief
*Mid-August Lunch(Pranzo di Ferragosto)
Wildflower (Fiorile)
Quiet Chaos (Caos Calmo)
The Nativity Story (well not
Italian but filmed in Calabria)

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